This is the last of the lids appropriated by
the Bride during her Southwest sojourn, and she, not surprisingly, picked it up
for the Project at the aforementioned museum's Colleen Cloney Duncan Shop.

‎A blanket of the same design is printed on
the gift shopping bags with the following description below: "Navajo
Blanket, Phase III Chief, ca. 1880-1900."

Besides being an awesome logo for the museum,
it reminds me of a story from our move cross country (recounted in Steve Harvey's Nov. 5, 1997. "Only in L.A." column in the LAT), the pertinent part of which I'm pasting below:

CROSS-CULTURAL LANGUAGE CLASHES (CONT.): Adam Tschorn of
Los Angeles recalled the time he spent a night in Chinle, Ariz., where a Native
American artisan "unrolled a very large, beautifully woven blanket which
he described as a 'Navajo Cheese Blanket.'"

"The term struck me as a bit odd," Tschorn
continued, "and after several additional references to this intricate and
expensive 'cheese blanket' my curiosity got the best of me. I asked our host
and the weaver what sort of ceremony the 'cheese blanket' was used for. After a
moment of awkward silence, our host looked at me with a smile and said, 'It's a
Navajo chief's blanket.' "

Tschorn added: "Needless to say it seems infinitely
funnier now than it did at the time. . . ."

Q: OK, nice hat -- but what exactly is Project Cubbins, anyway?A: One man's homage to Dr. Seuss and his second book, "The 500 Hats of Bartholemew Cubbins," which celebrated the 75th anniversary of its publication in 2013, Project Cubbins is an attempt to document the wearing of a different hat or piece of headgear every day for 500 consecutive days. No do-aheads, no banking of hats, no retroactive entries. PC started on May 27, 2013 with Hat 1.

About Me

Adam Tschorn is currently a staff writer at the Los Angeles Times where his coverage of fashion, style and popular culture most often appears online at All The Rage and in the hard copy of the Sunday Los Angeles Times Image section.

He's been covering menswear since 2004 and wearing it much, much longer than that. He holds a BA in philosophy and an MA in journalism, which has prepared him perfectly for watching fashion shows and asking: "Why?"